Private Lives

By Noel Coward

Directed by David Green

Produced in the Roaring Twenties, Private Lives contains some of the funniest, wittiest dialogue ever written.

A divorced couple each acquires a new spouse, only to find themselves on honeymoons in adjoining hotel suites. A few minutes together and they realize they are still in love - then the sizzle really starts! Timeless. Priceless.

Performed Autumn 2009

Cast

Sarah Farrar
Grant Filshall
Stevan Phipps
Jane Cole
Rachel Kellett

‘The four players work the spaces between the relationships flawlessly, showing exquisite comic timing, real stage presence and beautifully mannered behaviour except when they're squabbling like alley cats. It's still on tour in the region and is thoroughly, unashamedly recommended.’

— EADT

Behind the Scenes

Review - EADT

 

Open Space provide an invaluable service touring quality amateur drama around the rural areas, and their latest offering confirms their reputation as entertainers of the highest calibre.

Noel Coward's vintage period piece sparkles with repartee and one-liners in the Oscar Wilde tradition with all the 1930s' wit and elegance. Many lines are deliciously acerbic, cruel and downright hilarious. The characters deliver them with panache - 'I'm glad I'm not normal,” gets the response - “What an odd thing to be glad about!”.

The unlikely premise is a once-married couple meeting accidentally on their respective honeymoons to new partners, while sharing neighbouring hotel rooms. These are people who can't live with each other, but can't live without.

The play exposes the strains of relationships, dealing with other people's pasts and sudden squalls of anger. A couple of songs, a comic dance and a side-splitting fight add to the sheer enjoyment. David Green directs with skilful expertise and really gets the very last drop of comedy from everything.

The four players (Sarah Farrar, Grant Filshill, Jane Cole and Stephen Phipps) work the spaces between the relationships flawlessly, showing exquisite comic timing, real stage presence and beautifully mannered behaviour except when they're squabbling like alley cats.

It's still on tour in the region and is thoroughly, unashamedly recommended.